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Green 2022-04-20 09:01:32
Look
To say that the film has no suspense is not necessarily complete. Why Sally is a hero, and how Sally is whitewashed in the face of the aggressive investigation team, is the biggest suspense in the film. Therefore, around this core suspense, the film sets up three NTSB hearings to set up, interpret...
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Providenci 2022-04-21 09:01:42
Everyone does their best
The film culminates in the harsh hearing faced by Captain Sally after the accident, and reproduces the disaster from multiple angles through flashbacks with different focuses. What is moving is everyone's attitude towards life, whether it is to save a life or feel that he is about to lose his life,...

Jane Gabbert
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Bartender - Pete: [Sully walks into a pub and sits at the bar] Hey, is that you? Are you the pilot, Sully? that is you, right?
Chesley 'Sully' Sullenberger: Yeah.
Bartender - Pete: Hey, it's a pleasure to meet you. That was unreal what you did the other day, that was really something. It's a real pleasure to meet you. You know, we invented a drink after you as soon as that happened, ain't that right, Johnny?
Johnny - Drunk Customer: Yeah, yeah, you did.
Bartender - Pete: The Sully: It's a shot of Grey Goose with a splash of water.
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Ben Edwards: Multiple airports, runways, two successful landings, we are simply mimicking what the computer already told us.
Charles Porter: Now, a lot of toes were stepped on in order to set this up for today, and frankly... I really don't know what you gentlemen plan to gain by it.
Chesley 'Sully' Sullenberger: Can we get serious now?
Charles Porter: Captain?
Chesley 'Sully' Sullenberger: We've all heard about the computer simulations, and now we are watching actual sims, but I can't quite believe you still have not taken into account the human factor.
Charles Porter: Human piloted simulations show that you could make it back to the airport.
Chesley 'Sully' Sullenberger: No, they don't. These pilots were not behaving like human beings, like people who are experiencing this for the first time.
Charles Porter: Well, they may not be reacting like you did.
Chesley 'Sully' Sullenberger: Immediately after the bird strike they are turning back for the airport just as in the computer sims. Correct?
Charles Porter: That is correct.
Chesley 'Sully' Sullenberger: They obviously knew the turn and exactly what heading to fly. They did not run a check, they do not switch on the APU.
Charles Porter: They had on all the same parameters that you faced.
Chesley 'Sully' Sullenberger: No one warned us. No one said "You're going to lose both engines at a lower altitude than any jet in history. But, be cool, just make a left turn for LaGuardia like you are going back to pick up the milk". This was dual engine loss at 2800 feet followed by immediate water landing with 155 souls on board. No one has ever trained for an incident like that. No one.